Step 2: Appeared the Font box, again in the Font section uncheck at Hidden. At this point, you can select the paragraphs or lines that you want to be shown, right-click and choose Font. Step 1: Go to tab Home and choose Show/Hide tool. If you have a lot of hidden lines and paragraph and you only want to show a few of them, very simple, do as follow: Result: All the lines and paragraphs in the document are visible. If the box is checked, click on it to uncheck (you may have to click 2 times), then choose OK to save the change. Step 2: Font box appears, look into the Font section and find Hidden tick box. Step 1: Select all the document or use the combination key of Ctrl + A, then right-click and choose Font. Remove hidden properties in Word document. In this case you must remove the Hidden properties. Note: If the Hidden properties has been set by somebody else, you will not be alble to see the text no matter how much you type. If you click on Show/Hide tool again, the passage will continue to be hidden. Step 2: After clicking you can now see the hidden text. Now you want to see the passage hidden earlier, step 1: Go to tab Home and choose Show/Hide tool. With this way, the hidden paragraph is harder to detect because it has been covered by the next paragraph below. Step 3: The selected paragraph has been hidden and caused the paragraph below it to be pushed up. In the Font section tick on the box Hidden. Step 1: Select the paragraph you want to hide, then right-click and select Font. When you print the document, all headings are automatically expanded. Note that you can only collapse and expand parts of your document when you’re viewing it on your computer. NOTE: This change only applies to the current heading and not all headings at the same level, unless you modify the heading style to include this change. If you don’t have the cursor in a heading, the “Collapsed by default” is grayed out and cannot be selected. On the “Indents and Spacing” tab of the “Paragraph” dialog box, select the “Collapsed by default” check box to the right of the “Outline level” drop-down list so there is a check mark in the box. Place the cursor in a heading formatted with the heading level you want to collapse (such as Heading 1) and click the “Paragraph Settings” dialog box button in the “Paragraph” section of the “Home” tab. To do this, make sure the “Home” tab is active on the ribbon. You can also set up Word to automatically collapse certain heading levels by default. Then, select “Collapse All Headings” from the submenu to collapse all the headings in your document, or “Expand All Headings” to expand all the headings again. To do this, right-click on any heading and move your mouse over “Expand/Collapse” on the popup menu. Word provides a quick way to collapse or expand all headings at once. When we collapsed “Subheading A,” which is a Heading 2, it collapses the content up to “Section 2” because that heading level is greater than “Subheading A.” However, when we collapsed “Section 1,” “Subheading A” and the content below it was collapsed as well because it is a lesser heading level than “Section 1.” Notice in the image below that all the content below “Section 1” is collapsed up to “Section 2” because “Section 2” is the at same heading level (Heading 1) as “Section 1.” NOTE: When you collapse a heading, only the content up to the next heading of equal or lesser value is collapsed. To view the content again, simply click the arrow to the left of the heading again. The content below the heading collapses and only the heading displays. When you click on the arrow, the text below the heading is hidden. When you move the mouse over the space to the left of a heading, a right arrow displays. To do this, you must use the Heading styles in Word to format the headings in your document.